Daily intermittent hypoxia enhances walking after chronic spinal cord injury: a randomized trial.

Heather B Hayes, Arun Jayaraman, Megan Herrmann, Gordon S Mitchell, William Z Rymer, Randy D Trumbower
Author Information
  1. Heather B Hayes: From the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine (H.B.H., R.D.T.), Emory University, Atlanta, GA; Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (A.J., M.H., W.Z.R.), Northwestern University, Chicago; Sensory Motor Performance Program (A.J., W.Z.R.), Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, IL; Department of Comparative Biosciences (G.S.M.), University of Wisconsin, Madison; Department of Biomedical Engineering (R.D.T.), Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta; and The Shepherd Center (R.D.T.), Atlanta, GA.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To test the hypothesis that daily acute intermittent hypoxia (dAIH) and dAIH combined with overground walking improve walking speed and endurance in persons with chronic incomplete spinal cord injury (iSCI).
METHODS: Nineteen subjects completed the randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study. Participants received 15, 90-second hypoxic exposures (dAIH, fraction of inspired oxygen [Fio2] = 0.09) or daily normoxia (dSHAM, Fio2 = 0.21) at 60-second normoxic intervals on 5 consecutive days; dAIH was given alone or combined with 30 minutes of overground walking 1 hour later. Walking speed and endurance were quantified using 10-Meter and 6-Minute Walk Tests. The trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01272349).
RESULTS: dAIH improved walking speed and endurance. Ten-Meter Walk time improved with dAIH vs dSHAM after 1 day (mean difference [MD] 3.8 seconds, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.1-6.5 seconds, p = 0.006) and 2 weeks (MD 3.8 seconds, 95% CI 0.9-6.7 seconds, p = 0.010). Six-Minute Walk distance increased with combined dAIH + walking vs dSHAM + walking after 5 days (MD 94.4 m, 95% CI 17.5-171.3 m, p = 0.017) and 1-week follow-up (MD 97.0 m, 95% CI 20.1-173.9 m, p = 0.014). dAIH + walking increased walking distance more than dAIH after 1 day (MD 67.7 m, 95% CI 1.3-134.1 m, p = 0.046), 5 days (MD 107.0 m, 95% CI 40.6-173.4 m, p = 0.002), and 1-week follow-up (MD 136.0 m, 95% CI 65.3-206.6 m, p < 0.001).
CONCLUSIONS: dAIH ± walking improved walking speed and distance in persons with chronic iSCI. The impact of dAIH is enhanced by combination with walking, demonstrating that combinatorial therapies may promote greater functional benefits in persons with iSCI.
CLASSIFICATION OF EVIDENCE: This study provides Class I evidence that transient hypoxia (through measured breathing treatments), along with overground walking training, improves walking speed and endurance after iSCI.

Associated Data

ClinicalTrials.gov | NCT01272349

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MeSH Term

Adult
Aged
Chronic Disease
Cross-Over Studies
Data Interpretation, Statistical
Double-Blind Method
Exercise Therapy
Female
Humans
Hypoxia
Male
Middle Aged
Patient Safety
Recovery of Function
Spinal Cord Injuries
Treatment Outcome
Walking
Young Adult

Word Cloud

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